A discussion of the strategies and outcomes behind a special collections and metadata collaboration effort at the University of Rochester, River Campus Libraries, to make finding aids more discoverable and interoperable. Through the use of a project charter and specific goals, the project managers sought to create buy-in and build a culture of teamwork amongst the participants, resulting in both improved finding aids and a model for collaborative work across departments
Collaboration among libraries is the central tenet of modern library consortia. A number of underlyi...
Academic libraries house a variety of primary historical materials in their archives and special col...
Ruth Bryan, University Archivist, Special Collections and Research Center, M.L. King Library, Univer...
A discussion of the strategies and outcomes behind a special collections and metadata collaboration ...
PurposeThis paper aims to explore library–community collaboration from both a theoretical and practi...
Academic libraries are increasingly engaged in establishing community-based archives programs, often...
Working with non-traditional partners on digitization initiatives can be full of challenges. Communi...
This research examines how libraries are collaborating, why libraries collaborate, and seeks the env...
Academic libraries house a variety of primary historical materials in their archives and special col...
This paper presents two collaborative programs at a small academic library that leverage the insight...
Academic libraries and librarians have always been involved in some kind of collaboration within the...
Collaboration is vital when it comes to serving academic library patrons. In 2014, the Ottawa Univer...
Collaborative collecting highlights the opportunity for liaison librarians and archivists in academi...
Overview of a multi-year process in a library system that included weeding, inventory, reclamation w...
In a world where so many students have turned to the web for fast, “good enough” answers, how can li...
Collaboration among libraries is the central tenet of modern library consortia. A number of underlyi...
Academic libraries house a variety of primary historical materials in their archives and special col...
Ruth Bryan, University Archivist, Special Collections and Research Center, M.L. King Library, Univer...
A discussion of the strategies and outcomes behind a special collections and metadata collaboration ...
PurposeThis paper aims to explore library–community collaboration from both a theoretical and practi...
Academic libraries are increasingly engaged in establishing community-based archives programs, often...
Working with non-traditional partners on digitization initiatives can be full of challenges. Communi...
This research examines how libraries are collaborating, why libraries collaborate, and seeks the env...
Academic libraries house a variety of primary historical materials in their archives and special col...
This paper presents two collaborative programs at a small academic library that leverage the insight...
Academic libraries and librarians have always been involved in some kind of collaboration within the...
Collaboration is vital when it comes to serving academic library patrons. In 2014, the Ottawa Univer...
Collaborative collecting highlights the opportunity for liaison librarians and archivists in academi...
Overview of a multi-year process in a library system that included weeding, inventory, reclamation w...
In a world where so many students have turned to the web for fast, “good enough” answers, how can li...
Collaboration among libraries is the central tenet of modern library consortia. A number of underlyi...
Academic libraries house a variety of primary historical materials in their archives and special col...
Ruth Bryan, University Archivist, Special Collections and Research Center, M.L. King Library, Univer...